Monday, January 26, 2015

Steps Required Before Conducting a Craft Brewery Real Estate Search

Step 1
Make it all legal
You need to create a legal entity for your business. S Corp, C Corp, or LLC. It should be done first. This shows that you, and your partners, are serious and committed.
Step 2
Impress Potential Investors and Landlords of your Craft Brewery
So you want to open a craft brewery. Which means you need money, and a location for said brewery. Which means you will be interfacing with investors, who have money, and landlords, who have buildings.
If you want this budding relationship with investors and landlords to lead to a successful conclusion, then you need to create positive impression right at the start.
This where your “Business Plan” comes in. The parts of a Business Plan are as follows:
Executive Summary
It should all be there, “Summarized”. What you want to do, how you are paying for it, how much money you need to open with a capital reserve, what you plan to do with the building, where you are going to sell your beer, and how you are going to market your brewery and beer.
Management Biographies
Introduce yourselves. Include a SHORT bio, which shows your passion for craft beer and what expertise each partner is bringing to the table.
Financials
Show where the funds are coming from, how much you will spend to get open, how much you will have left over for contingencies and marketing, and 3 year sales projections. Be concise.
Marketing Strategy
You need to show that you can sell beer in the marketplace, or at least in your taproom. Hours of operation for you taproom, local community involvement, tap takeovers, and industry relationships. Again, a brief plan that oozes confidence without sounding like BS.
Step 3
Raise Money
Use your family, acquaintances, and business contacts to build your capital. Leave no stone unturned. While Kickstarter and other crowdfunding sites have been used with limited success, most of your money will come from the aforementioned sources.
Step 4
Find a Building
Begin looking for a suitable space for a craft brewery. Use a broker who knows the unique needs of a craft brewery, like me. Clean industrial buildings with high ceilings come and go quickly. Any landlord will expect to see Steps 1 and 2 completed, and Step 3 coming to a conclusion, before they are willing to commit to negotiating a lease.

Contact me if you want to open a craft brewery in Los Angeles or Orange County
Mike Lanzarotta, NAI Capital Commercial Real Estate
Craft Brewery Real Estate Blog - http://craftbreweryrealestate.blogspot.com/

Cell 626 826 5586    Direct 626 204 1509      mlanzarotta@naicapital.com